Secondary resonant pickup coils (102) used in loosely coupled inductive power transfer systems, with resonating capacitors (902) have high Q and could support large circulating currents which may destroy components. A current limit or "safety valve" uses an inductor designed to enter saturation at predetermined resonating currents somewhat above normal working levels. saturation is immediate and passive. The constant-current characteristic of a loosely coupled, controlled pickup means that if the saturable section is shared by coupling flux and by leakage flux, then on saturation the current source is terminated in the saturated inductor, and little detuning from resonance occurs. Alternatively an external saturable inductor (1101, 1102) may be introduced within the resonant circuit (102 and 902), to detune the circuit away from the system frequency. Alternatively DC current may be passed through a winding to increase saturation of a saturable part of a core. As a result, a fail-safe pickup offering a voltage-limited constant-current output is provided.
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1. An apparatus for controlling an inductive power transfer pickup for use in a loosely coupled inductive power transfer system, the pickup collecting power in the form of a current source from a magnetic flux surrounding a primary conductor upon energizing the primary conductor with alternating current at a system frequency, wherein the pickup comprises means for controlling an output voltage or output current at a value above a working range of said output voltage or output current, for safety purposes, and wherein the pickup is a resonant circuit which is resonant at the system frequency, wherein the pickup comprises passive means for limiting the amount of a resonating current circulating in said pickup at less than a predetermined maximum amount, said passive means comprising at least one saturable inductor having a core, wherein at least a portion of the at least one saturable inductor exhibits an onset of saturation within the core at or above a selected current so that the onset of saturation within the core changes the resonant frequency of the pickup and so causes the tuning of the pickup to deviate from the system frequency, thereby reducing the effectiveness of the collection of power and so causing the amount of the current entering the resonant circuit to be reduced.
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This invention relates to inductive power transfer; more particularly to loosely coupled systems for inductive power transfer, and in particular this invention relates to protection means for limiting the amount of current circulating in a secondary pickup coil of an inductive power transfer system.
The general structure of an inductive power transfer installation is that there is a primary conductor (or more) energised with alternating current, and one or more secondary or pickup devices which intercept the changing flux surrounding the primary conductor and convert this flux into electrical energy by means of windings. Often the pickup devices are mobile, and move alongside, or sometimes (if internal energy storage is available) away from the primary conductors.
There appears to be at least two distinct groups of inductive power transfer systems amongst the published literature. One group uses a "spread-out transformer" approach for the primary trackway, in which a series of iron laminations is used along the full length of the trackway to enhance coupling of the flux to an adjacent set of laminations comprising the flux concentrating means used to cause the collected flux to traverse the (sometimes) resonant pickup windings. The energising frequency is relatively low (from mains frequency up to about 5 kHz). Often the primary trackway is buried in a road and faces upwards to link with pickups beneath a road vehicle that face downwards. This approach provides tight coupling, and power is received essentially as if it arrives from a constant-voltage source. Examples of this type of approach are illustrated in a series of patent specifications from Bolger (e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 4007817 or FIG. 1 of U.S. Pat. No. 4800328). Klontz et al ( U.S. Pat. No. 5157319) describes an alternative tight coupling, involving a coaxial winding transformer secondary encircling a primary conductor.
Our group uses as the primary trackway an elongated loop formed from a parallel pair of conductors, without ferri/ferromagnetic material, and flux is coupled through the core (which does include ferri/ferromagnetic material) to the windings of the resonant pickup coil. This coupling is described as loose. Some versions of the track are provided with lumped resonance elements. The delivery of power is controlled by decoupling at the pickup, using a number of disclosed techniques, and because the system uses a resonant circuit as part of the pickup, the current At produces appears to come from a constant-current source. The energising frequency is relatively high (10-30 kHz), and in some examples the primary trackway is mounted upon a conveyer rail, facing sideways to couple with pickups upon self-powered conveyer units, although it is in other instances embedded within a roadway. This type of approach is illustrated in a series of patent specifications from Boys & Green, commencing with WO 92/17929.
For a comparison of these two approaches refer to
where M is the inductance of 1504.
We have devised a battery charger which employs loosely coupled inductive power transfer, the subject of patent application PCT/NZ97/00053. Considering a practical circuit from the battery charger in transformer equivalent form, as shown in
Since the denominator at resonance is zero then Z is infinite; thereby providing the basis for stating that the source acts as a current source. A Bolger type circuit is equivalent to FIG. 13. The no-load voltage will be determined by the output impedance Z=L1303+L1302 when driven from a voltage source as is done in Bolger type circuits. The output impedance is Z=L1303+L1301 if the circuit were to be driven from a current source.
While the constant-current characteristic of this type of inductive power transfer system is generally an advantage, it does impose a risk should a pickup coil enter a state in which there is no control over the amount of current collected. A perfect constant-current source will have no voltage limit. An uncontrolled current resonating in a resonant secondary circuit forming part of a loosely coupled inductive power transfer system may build up to reach high levels if the circuit Q is large, whereupon a number of adverse results may occur, such as component failure, for example by overheating or breakdown of semiconductors or of dielectrics within resonating capacitors and apart from loss of function this can lead to the development of fire within the pickup device. Our usual methods for controlling secondary current rely on active control apparatus, actively causing a switching action about the resonant secondary when an over-voltage condition is detected by a voltage comparing circuit. Passive limiting, relying perhaps on the inherent bulk properties of materials should be safer than active control means. Reliance on active control can break down when several factors impinge together on a device so that active control becomes least likely to function when it is most needed. Some systems using loosely coupled (i. e. constant-current) inductive power transfer have been employed in situations where extreme reliability is a desired feature. If such systems rely solely on active control to restrict the circulating current, then in the absence of function by the active control it is likely that a catastrophic breakdown will occur.
Bolger and Ng in U.S. Pat. No. 4,800,328 (Jan. 24 1989) described the application of constant-voltage transformer principles to an inductive power transfer device by providing a saturable pickup core. This is a control application. The laminated iron core is intentionally provided with a saturable site of reduced cross-sectional area. During normal operating conditions the core is always saturated to a variable extent and the output from the pickup is limited accordingly by the amount of flux remaining within the core. Furthermore, the resonant frequency is designed to be less than that of the supply voltage at low loads, so that as the core moves into saturation, the resonant frequency rises towards the system frequency; coupling improves and more output (resembling a constant voltage) is available. Cores of this type, driven into saturation will evolve heat from hysteresis losses, and cooling is not provided for in the region of the constriction, so this approach would result in a quite temperature-sensitive output voltage. The inventors have consistently aimed for a constant-voltage approach.
Loosely coupled in relation to the transfer of inductive power means that the proportion of flux actually coupling the primary to the secondary is significantly less than the total magnetic flux present in the region of the coupling structures.
Ferrimagnetic properties occur in ferrite materials, in which the entire ferrite molecule contributes to the magnetic properties. In the main these are comparable to ferromagnetic properties; permeability, saturation, hysteresis, etc. occur in ferrimagnetic materials.
Ferromagnetic properties occur in iron, nickel, cobalt, gadolinium, and dysprosium, and their alloys, in which the magnetic properties reside in the atoms. Useful ferromagnetic materials for this application include powdered iron, sintered iron, amorphous iron wires, laminations of iron, silicon steel, grain-oriented steel; used alone or in combination.
Saturation is a property of ferri/ferromagnetic materials defined as a change in the permeability of the material as a function of the magnetic field, in which the material exhibits a finite capacity to carry a quantity of flux, so that the permeability falls as the field rises. An analogy to saturation is the way that a bath towel can absorb only a limited amount of water, after which the surplus water drips off.
It is an object of this invention to provide an apparatus or a method for controlling an inductive power transfer pickup, or at least to provide the public with a useful choice.
In a first broad aspect the invention provides apparatus for controlling an inductive power transfer pickup for use in a loosely coupled inductive power transfer system, said pickup being capable in use of collecting power in the form of a current source from a magnetic flux surrounding a primary conductor when energised with alternating current at a system frequency, wherein the pickup includes active control means capable of controlling an output voltage or output current, and wherein the pickup is a resonant circuit which is resonant at the system frequency, the pickup includes passive means capable of limiting the amount of a resonating current circulating in said pickup at less than a predetermined maximum amount, said passive means comprising at least one saturable inductor having a core; at least a portion of the core being capable of becoming saturated at a predetermined flux density; the saturable inductor being connected so as to carry at least a portion of the resonating current so that the onset of saturation within the core reduces the effectiveness of the collection of power and so causes the amount of the current entering the resonant circuit to be limited.
In a related aspect the invention provides apparatus as previously described wherein the core capable of becoming saturated is comprised of a ferrimagnetic material.
In a related aspect the invention provides apparatus as previously described wherein the core capable of becoming saturated is comprised of a ferromagnetic material.
In a related aspect the invention provides apparatus as previously described wherein the at least one saturable inductor is constructed so that the saturable portion of the core is shared by both a coupling flux and by a leakage flux, so that the onset of saturation causes the amount of coupling flux to be diminished and hence the amount of current entering the resonant circuit from the current source is also diminished and so that the onset of saturation results in a minimal amount of detuning.
In another related aspect the invention provides that at least one saturable inductor is selected to exhibit an onset of saturation within the core at or above a selected current so that the onset of saturation within the core changes the resonant frequency of the pickup and so causes the tuning of the pickup to deviate from the system frequency, thereby reducing the effectiveness of the collection of power and so causing the amount of the current entering the resonant circuit to be reduced.
In another related aspect the invention provides that at least one saturable inductor is constructed so that, when in use, the saturable portion of the core is shared by both a coupling flux and by a leakage flux, so that the onset of saturation causes the amount of coupling flux to be diminished and hence the amount of current entering the resonant circuit from the current source is also diminished and so that the onset of saturation results in a minimal amount of detuning.
In a further related aspect the invention includes a core capable of intercepting the flux; the core having a saturable part having a restricted cross-sectional area capable of exhibiting an onset of saturation at a predetermined flux density so that the efficiency of coupling between the primary conductor and the pickup circuit is reduced if the material becomes at least partially saturated.
In a yet further related aspect the invention provides that the predetermined flux density at which the onset of saturation may occur is determined by selecting a material having known saturation threshold properties from a range of ferrimagnetic or ferromagnetic materials and using an amount of the selected material within a flux-carrying part of the core so that the efficiency of coupling between the primary conductor and the pickup circuit is reduced if the material becomes at least partially saturated.
In a related aspect the invention includes a procedure in which the amount of flux required to reach an onset of saturation is controlled by passing current through one or more additional windings wound over a portion of the core having a predetermined onset of saturation; the windings being capable of carrying a DC current capable of generating a flux within the saturable portion of the core; the DC current being generated by a controller responsive to power pickup conditions during use, so that the efficiency of coupling between the primary conductor and the pickup circuit is thereby controllable.
In a yet further related aspect the invention provides that the saturable inductor is physically separate from an inductor capable of intercepting the magnetic flux, and the saturable inductor is connected within the resonant circuit so that the saturable inductor carries at least a proportion of the total resonating current, and so that the onset of at least partial saturation in the saturable inductor during use causes the resonant frequency of the pickup to move away from the system frequency.
In a second broad aspect the invention provides a method for operating a resonant inductive power pickup device for an inductive power transfer system wherein the magnitude of a circulating resonant current within the pickup device is capable of being limited so as to remain below an intended magnitude as a result of at least partial saturation being reached within a saturable core of an inductor included within the resonant circuit of the device, the limiting process being independent of an active control means, so that a voltage limit is provided.
In a third broad aspect the invention provides a method for operating a resonant inductive power pickup device for an inductive power transfer system, wherein the magnitude of the circulating resonant current within the pickup device is controllable as a result of saturation being caused within a saturable inductor included within the resonant circuit of the device by a magnetising current passed through at least one additional winding; the magnetising current being provided by an active control means.
In a fourth broad aspect the invention provides apparatus for controlling the amount of power within a power pickup device having a secondary pickup inductor, having a ferromagnetic core, included in a resonant circuit, wherein the apparatus employs a physical property (apart from a permeability greater than that of air at normal temperature for non-saturating amounts of magnetic flux) of the core, wherein the physical property is deliberately predetermined so that the core behaves in a manner capable of limiting the pickup of power when operating under conditions outside normal use of the pickup.
In a fifth broad aspect the invention provides apparatus for controlling the amount of power within a power pickup device as described previously, wherein the apparatus includes a ferromagnetic core including in its magnetic circuit at least a portion of material selected to exhibit a preferably reversible reduction in permeability with a rise in temperature; the permeability reaching substantially 1.0 at the Curie point, so that in the event of the core reaching too high a temperature the permeability of the core is reduced, thereby limiting the voltage circulating within the resonant circuit.
In a sixth broad aspect the invention provides a method for operating an inductive power pickup device for an inductive power transfer system wherein the output of the pickup device is controlled as a result of saturation being reached during normal use in a ferromagnetic pickup core within the device.
In a related aspect the invention provides a method for operating an inductive power pickup device for an inductive power transfer system wherein potentially catastrophic circulating resonant currents within the pickup device are limited either as a result of saturation being reached within a ferromagnetic pickup core within the device, so that the inductance of the inductor is altered and the amount of power transferred is reduced.
The preferred embodiments to be described and illustrated in this specification are provided purely by way of example and are in no way intended to be limiting as to the spirit or the scope of the invention.
FIG. 1: (and section:
FIG. 2: (and section:
FIG. 3: (and section:
FIG. 4: (and section:
FIG. 9: shows a simplified circuit diagram for a secondary pickup according to the invention, having a predetermined and fixed saturation point.
FIG. 10A: shows a simplified circuit diagram for a controllable-saturation secondary pickup according to the invention.
FIG. 10B: shows an application of
FIG. 10C: shows an application of
FIG. 11: shows two simplified circuit diagrams for a pickup circuit having a saturable inductor separated from the pickup inductor.
FIG. 18: is an oscillogram drawn from a sampled waveform display, showing the secondary voltage in a battery charger over a short period after starting.
FIG. 19: is an oscillogram drawn from a sampled waveform display, showing the secondary voltage in a battery charger over a longer period after starting.
This invention provides means for limiting the amount of power within a power pickup device having as a pickup a secondary inductor using a ferrimagnetic or ferromagnetic core, and forming part of a resonant circuit for a loosely coupled inductive power transfer system. The invention relies on one of the magnetic properties of those types of material, namely an ability to be saturated. In a loosely coupled, resonant secondary type of inductive power transfer system, large magnetic fields are more a result of resonant current that circulates in the high-Q windings 102 during any period when the power being drawn from the pickup is less than the amount of power received as magnetic flux rather than a direct consequence of the magnetic field collected from the primary conductors. It may be regarded as "voltage-sensitive control of a current source". Generally this invention provides a "backup to a controller" or a "safety valve" and it is useful to have a safety valve that relies on an intrinsic property of a material rather than an active control device such as that described in our publication WO92/17929, because an active control device may from time to time fail for any one of a number of reasons.
We will describe a protection process relating to start-up conditions for which saturation, being a passive control means having no "warmup" or "initialisation procedure", is well suited.
It is useful to contrast this invention with normal practice. Although any ferri/ferromagnetic core will of course reach saturation at some level of flux (just as any boiler will blow up if there is no safety valve) this invention relates in particular to a method for determining the maximum allowable output from a loosely coupled pickup and hence to designing the windings and core so that the core will saturate at that maximum output, and the windings cannot deliver a greater output voltage or current than the predetermined maximum. This is the "safety valve" effect. Different inductive power transfer applications will present different ratios of usual running output to maximum allowable output and a "stable" application such as a battery charger may have a ratio closer to 1.0 than an application involving power fed to a motorised conveyance without storage.
Our preferred active control means use partial decoupling by, in effect, causing a conductive mass to appear within the gap across which inductive power passes from a primary conductor to a secondary conductor. The conductive mass is in fact the shorted secondary pickup (see 1604 in FIG. 16). Shorting the secondary winding would in any case bring any output to zero and shorting is a valid action given a constant-current type of supply. This control means rapidly decreases the amount of voltage coming from the secondary pickup and presents a "magnetically reflective" conductive surface to the magnetic fields emanating from the primary pathway so that any incident flux induces an equal and opposite flux in the shorted winding. An active control involves an electronic circuit typically including a comparator, a driver for a solid-state switch, and the solid-state switch itself and as such requires a power supply and has a finite "settling" or "warm-up" period which may be a weakness. (See example 1). A loosely coupled pickup circuit controlled in this way resembles a constant-current source.
In this specification we use the well-known "E" core as our prototype example, although the physical embodiments of inductive power pickup coils can take many shapes and this invention is applicable to all ferri- or ferromagnetic cores. An example of a prior-art ferrimagnetic pickup is shown in
There are at least two mechanisms by means of which the effect of saturation can be used to destroy coupling and reduce circulating current. The detuning mechanism acts whenever the onset of saturation causes the core permeability and hence the secondary inductance to decrease, the resonant frequency of the pickup changes, and decoupling occurs by detuning from a pre-existing system-wide resonant frequency. The other mechanism relies on terminating the constant-current source in a short circuit when decoupling is required. Refer to the equivalent transformer circuit of FIG. 15. Reducing (by saturation) the inductance of the shared portion M (1504) of the equivalent circuit has the effect of terminating the constant-current supply entering through 1501, 1502 in a short circuit, whereupon there is no current to pass through 1503 and drive the load. This approach to disabling a constant-current supply by shorting it is preferable to presenting an open circuit, because in that case the voltage will tend to rise indefinitely--or at least until catastrophic failure occurs. The risk of exceeding the ratings of conductors or components, with consequential breakdown, can be minimised because the maximum output in the absence of control is predictable. It is determined mainly by the physical properties of the core (e.g. see
Although these mechanisms may act simultaneously, the detuning effect of saturation of the core associated with M (1504) is small. Detuning may affect other resonant circuits within an inductive power transfer system. Thus we prefer to deliberately locate the saturable portion of the core underneath the windings and the option in which a different saturable material provides the saturable effect is usually to be preferred.
If on the other hand the saturable portion was in inductor 1503 in
The relationship of current versus voltage for a system where the windings surround the saturable core section includes a relatively sharp drop of current with rising voltage in a case where tight coupling exists (see "Illustration" below). Coupled power is proportional to M2. In contrast, an alternative method using a separate saturable inductor (see later) results in a more gradual fall of current with rising voltage because in this case detuning is a dominant factor. That method has other advantages.
In a battery charging apparatus (as described in application PCT/NZ97/00053 in which a controlled high-voltage tuned resonant circuit and a low-voltage circuit which simply provides an output are tightly mutually coupled, the onset of saturation provides a sharp reduction in coupling as shown by the onset of a sharp deviation between prediction (the formula itself not including a saturation term) and measurement as the drawn current is reduced toward a saturation point at about 210 A.
where 22 represents the ratio of turns between the coupled windings, VAC refers to the higher voltage of the control windings which are not the windings responsible for the rectified DC voltage, the 0.004IDC factor represents a leakage flux from wiring and 0.6V represents the forward voltage drop of diodes. The constants in the first term reduce to 0.0409VAC.
Measured | Measured | Calculated | Discrepancy; | |
IDC | VAC | VDC | VDC | diode drop = 0.6 V |
0.6 | 466 | 19.5 | 495.7 | |
210 | 444 | 17.0 | 16.52 | 0.3 |
240 | 414 | 15.4 | 15.10 | 0.1 |
255 | 361 | 13.1 | 12.90 | 0.0 |
270 | 146 | 4.3 | 4.09 | 0.0 |
Note the abrupt onset of saturation as the drawn-off current falls. (In this example the primary current was constant).
Several example design strategies are now described for putting this invention into practice, and may be used separately or together. For instance, strategy 3 can be applied over strategies 1 or 2 to trim the maximum flux before saturation as an "on-site adjustment" similar to setting a safety valve, and strategy 3 can even be used as a power control means.
While retaining the "flux collecting" areas of the pickup core as before, provide a reduction of cross-sectional area of the core, preferably at some position within the common flux path. Generally the common position would lie inside the windings of the resonant secondary inductor. See
Provide a different type of ferrite at a position preferably within the common flux path; the different ferrite having a more easily saturable property. In
Using a separate saturable inductor particularly as a de-tuning element, connected elsewhere about the resonant circuit (as shown in
Provide electrical means for saturation of the ferrite, using DC (usually) magnetising currents.
The fourth or active control strategy can be combined with the previous strategies so that a purely passive system backs up an active, controllable setting. Such a "fail-safe" approach may be mandatory in certain applications.
It is also possible to include an over-temperature protection, which amounts to an alternative type of "safety valve" by including a material which saturates particularly easily with rising temperature. In fact virtually all saturable materials are quite temperature-dependent. Furthermore, it may be possible to exploit the Curie point of a selected material so that at least a portion of the core becomes effectively non-ferromagnetic (the permeability tends to 1.0) when raised above the temperature of its Curie point. Hence overheating of the core or perhaps the surrounding windings results in a reliable cut off of circulating power. Again, it is preferable to place this material beneath the winding (such as 1504). A disadvantage of this method is the slow response time inherent in a process involving heating of a mass; incapable of protection of faster destructive processes such as those applying to excessively reverse biased rectifiers, or to voltage-stressed capacitors.
Any of these strategies tends to result in a state of saturation or loss of ferromagnetic properties within the core of the pickup during circumstances when an amount of power collected by the power pickup device from the primary conductors (source of magnetic flux) 103, 104 significantly exceeds the amount of power drawn from the power pickup. The point at which saturation occurs can be set by design, materials selection, and/or by external saturation means (
Many of our existing inductive power transfer systems involve the use of a common system frequency and the primary power supply is run in a self-resonating mode in which the aggregate of resonant frequencies of the primary pathway and various loosely coupled secondary circuits sets the "oscillation" frequency of the power source. A closely similar resonant frequency in all resonant circuits maximises coupling and reduces the risk of frequency hopping or other instabilities. The system-wide resonant frequency is typically 10 to 15 kHz in our installations. If the saturation-based controls used cause detuning, the power supply used for supplying power to the primary inductive pathway is preferably a constant-frequency type, because any change of primary supply frequency could adversely affect other pickups operating along the same primary inductive pathway. Furthermore, if the power supply could "chase" the detuned pickup frequency the control would have no effect. Hence we prefer to rely on manipulation of the shared inductance so as to maximise the dependence of M (1504 in
The constant-current inductive power transfer pickup of a loosely coupled system becomes, in the presence of saturation-based limiting of resonant current, a voltage-limited constant-current source. If the system was always operated in saturation, it may then become a constant-voltage source. This is not energy-efficient, for example because of losses in the saturable core, and it is not stable, because heating caused by losses causes a drift of saturation.
In a device using inductive power transfer for battery charging purposes the saturated-core pickup design has been designed so that the rectifier diodes are effectively protected from a voltage surge which will otherwise occur at any time that a shorting controller enters the "open" state, or at the initial connection of power. Because a constant-current supply exists, the immediate injection of full power results in a voltage surge because consumption rises more slowly. The rate of rise of current flow from the rectifier to the battery is limited by a series inductance.
The design process in respect of saturation comprises the provision of a core which will saturate, when at a low end of an operating temperature range, before the output voltage exceeds the peak inverse voltage rating of the rectifier diodes used. (The "low temperature" is specified only because the flux density at saturation reduces with increasing temperature). This application uses a bridge comprised of Schottky diodes each having a peak inverse voltage rating of 45V. The number of turns is almost 1 in this instance, and the maximum allowable flux is therefore set to be less than an amount giving 90V per turn (the limit for two diodes in series). In practice we obtain 26V per turn from our prototype transformer. This application of saturation provides instantaneous protection and, being based on material properties, does not require prior activation of active devices.
In this example, the drawn current is relatively predictable and the voltage at which saturation occurs may be set to be only a small amount more than the output voltage. (Other applications such as moving vehicles, having a widely varying load, may require a greater margin between output and saturation).
Example measurements are given in
A second adverse effect is also controlled by the saturable core. This is the tendency for the circuit comprising the resonating capacitor and the series inductor (not the pickup resonant inductor) to form an undamped resonant circuit and undergo repeated large excursions in flow. The rectifier and the battery form part of this circuit yet have little damping effect.
Although the examples relate to an "E" shaped core, and although we use the term "ferrite" in referring to preferred core materials discussed herein, the principles of the invention apply to any configuration and material of any core made of a ferrimagnetic or a ferromagnetic material.
In the case of relatively tightly coupled inductive power transfer systems, the manipulation of coupling by saturation is less useful, but detuning properties may be exploited. The principles described herein also apply to situations in which secondary resonance is not normally exploited and in those, decoupling is the most important mechanism.
The proposed secondary current limiting means is passive and relies on the bulk properties of a material. Therefore the invention should have a very reliable fail-safe control feature. Temperature rises, mechanical shocks, fractures, and the like reduce the saturation capacity. Only cooling can increase it. The risk of exceeding any ratings of ancillary components is now brought under control--as in Example 1--regardless of whether active protection circuits have been properly activated. Use of saturation as a control means, as described herein, is a "wattless" kind of control. If the active section fails, the passive saturation limit is reached.
Finally, it will be appreciated that various alterations and modifications may be made to the foregoing without departing from the scope of this invention as set forth in the following claims.
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